Legacy: The Multiplied Aim of Our Lives
Building a life for yourself is not enough. All of us are called to build a legacy beyond ourselves.
Guest Speaker: Lee Cummings
Date: April 26, 2026
What are you aiming your legacy at? Pastor Lee Cummings delivers a message on the importance of building a faith that is multi-generational. Don't miss it!
Here's a 5-day devotional guide based on this sermon:
Day 1: The Aim of Your Life
Reading: 2 Timothy 3:10–14
Devotional: Paul reminds Timothy of the power of a life lived with intentional aim. What are you aiming your life at? Many of us hit targets with perfect precision, yet miss what truly matters. The close targets—comfort, temporary success, immediate gratification—are easy to hit. But eternal legacy requires the precision of a long-distance marksman, constantly adjusting for the elements of life. Paul's legacy to Timothy wasn't wealth or fame, but faith, patience, love, and steadfastness in the face of persecution. Today, evaluate your aim. Are you building just a life, or are you building a legacy? Start from your last day and work backward. Who do you want to be? What do you want others to say? Let that vision guide today's choices.
Day 2: Multi-Generational Blessing
Reading: 2 Timothy 1:5; Deuteronomy 7:9
Devotional: Timothy's faith didn't begin with him—it flowed through his grandmother, Lois, and his mother, Eunice. This is the beauty of generational blessing: what one generation experiences as their ceiling becomes the next generation's floor. God promises His steadfast love to a thousand generations of those who love Him. You carry a legacy, whether from natural family or spiritual mentors who invested in you. Their prayers, sacrifices, and faith created the foundation you now stand on. But legacy doesn't stop with receiving—it demands giving. Who are you pouring into? What inheritance of faith, wisdom, and godly character are you passing down? Remember, compounded spiritual interest creates wealth that outlasts any earthly treasure. Invest in the next generation today.
Day 3: The Great Cloud of Witnesses
Reading: Hebrews 11:1–12:2
Devotional: You are not alone in your journey of faith. Hebrews 12 reminds us we're surrounded by a great cloud of witnesses—those who've gone before us, who now see their faith made sight. They're leaning over heaven's banister, cheering you on. Your great-grandmother's prayers, your spiritual father's investment, that mentor's wisdom—none of it was wasted. They see the fruit now. This truth should ignite holy courage within you. When you're tempted to live for the moment, remember they're watching. When difficulty comes, recall their perseverance. Not one of them regrets the time, resources, or wisdom they invested in others. What they regret is not giving more. Fix your eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of faith, and run your race knowing you're part of something eternal.
Day 4: Fatherlessness and the Curse of No Legacy
Reading: Exodus 20:5-6; Proverbs 13:22
Devotional: Our culture suffers from epidemic fatherlessness—not just absent fathers, but absent legacy. When generations fail to pass down wisdom, faith, and godly character, each generation starts from zero. God's blessing extends to thousands of generations, but curses visit three to four generations when we neglect our calling. A good person leaves an inheritance to their children's children—not primarily material wealth, but spiritual richness. Are you teaching the next generation about faith, purity, stewardship, and walking with God? Or are you letting the world, social media, and ungodly influences shape them? The difference between Jonathan Edwards' descendants (pastors, doctors, leaders) and Max Jukes' line (criminals, addicts, ending in extinction) was intentionality. Break generational curses today by becoming a generational blessing.
Day 5: Three Generations in the House
Reading: 1 John 2:12–14
Devotional: John writes to three generations: children, young men, and fathers. This is God's design for the Church—not single-generation silos, but a multi-generational community where Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob dwell together. Young people bring zeal, energy, and a fresh perspective. The middle generations bridge and translate. Older generations offer wisdom, experience, and resources. We need all three. Single-generation churches may be passionate or comfortable, but they lack the compounded blessing of legacy. The older must celebrate and invest in the younger. The younger must honor and learn from the older. Together, we create an environment where legacy travels forward. What's your role? Are you receiving wisdom? Bridging generations? Passing the baton? The kingdom thrives when all generations do their part, strengthening one another for an eternal legacy.